Aspects of a biosensor platform system and method are described. In one embodiment, the biosensor platform system includes a fluidic system and tunneling biosensor interface coupled to the fluidic system. The tunneling biosensor interface may include a transducing electrode array having at least one dielectric thin film deposited on an electrode array. The biosensor platform system may further include processing logic operatively coupled to the transducing electrode array. In operation, the application of an electromagnetic field at an interface between an electrode and an electrolyte in the system, for example, may result in the transfer of charge across the interface. The transfer of charge is, in turn, characterized by electromagnetic field-mediated tunneling of electrons that may be assisted by exchange of energy with thermal vibrations at the interface. By analysis of the transfer of charge, the identify of various analytes, for example, or other compositions.
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6. A biosensor platform system, comprising:
a fluidic system configured to receive a sample comprising a redox specie and an analyte specie;
a biosensor interface including dielectric thin films layered on an electrode array on a semiconductor die, wherein the dielectric thin films comprise tunneling barriers at metal-dielectric and dielectric-electrolyte interfaces; and
processing logic operatively coupled to the biosensor interface, and configured to apply a voltage bias between the received sample and an electrode in the electrode array, the applied voltage bias configured to generate a tunneling current configured to flow from the redox specie to the electrode array via the dielectric thin films,
wherein the tunneling current is indicative of the analyte specie.
1. A biosensor platform system, comprising:
a tunneling biosensor interface configured to operatively couple to a fluidic system configured to receive a sample comprising a redox specie and an analyte specie, the tunneling biosensor interface comprising:
a transducing electrode array comprising at least one dielectric thin film deposited on an electrode array and configured to contact the sample, wherein the at least one dielectric thin film comprises a sequential layering of low-k and high-k dielectric materials; and
processing logic operatively coupled to the transducing electrode array, and configured to apply a voltage bias between the received sample and the transducing electrode array, the applied voltage bias configured to generate a tunneling current configured to flow from the redox specie to the transducing electrode array via the at least one dielectric thin film,
wherein the tunneling current is indicative of the analyte specie.
2. The biosensor platform system of
a sample acquisition zone;
a filtration module in fluidic communication with the sample acquisition zone;
an immunoseparation module in fluidic communication with the filtration module;
a tapered micro-chromatogram in fluidic communication with the immunoseparation module; and
an adsorption pad in fluidic communication with the tapered micro-chromatogram.
3. The biosensor platform system of
4. The biosensor platform system of
5. The biosensor platform system of
7. The biosensor platform system of
8. The biosensor platform system of
a sample acquisition zone;
a filtration module in fluidic communication with the sample acquisition zone;
an immunoseparation module in fluidic communication with the filtration module;
a tapered micro-chromatogram in fluidic communication with the immunoseparation module; and
an adsorption pad in fluidic communication with the tapered micro-chromatogram.
9. The biosensor platform system of
10. The biosensor platform system of
11. The biosensor platform system of
Ta2O2;
ZrO2, and
TiO2.
12. The biosensor platform system of
13. The biosensor platform system of
14. The biosensor platform system of
15. The biosensor platform system of
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/864,072, filed Aug. 9, 2013, the entire contents of which application is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with government support under contract N66001-11-1-4111 awarded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. The government has certain rights in this invention.
In a variety of applications, the detection and identification of certain chemical or molecular species is desired. For example, it may be desirable to identify small molecule analytes, such as amino acids and metallic ions, as well as relatively large proteins, such as DNA and RNA. In particular, the detection of biomarkers in biological samples is important for disease detection, disease analysis, and disease pathway investigation. Further, the detection of contaminants in environmental samples, such as in water, is important for homeland security, public safety, and environmental welfare.
For a more complete understanding of the embodiments described herein and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following description, in conjunction with the accompanying figures briefly described as follows:
The drawings illustrate only example embodiments and are therefore not to be considered limiting of the scope described herein, as other equally effective embodiments are within the scope and spirit of this disclosure. The elements and features shown in the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon clearly illustrating the principles of the embodiments. Additionally, certain dimensions may be exaggerated to help visually convey certain principles. In the drawings, similar reference numerals between figures designate like or corresponding, but not necessarily the same, elements.
As described above, the detection and identification of certain chemical or molecular species is desired in various fields and applications. In particular, the detection of biomarkers in biological samples is important for disease detection, disease analysis, and disease pathway investigation. Further, the detection of contaminants in environmental samples, such as in water, is important for homeland security, public safety, and environmental welfare.
Using conventional means and methods, certain chemical and molecular species may be identified. The identification of these species may be achieved using bioassays, electronic systems, or combinations thereof, for example. Typically, a bioassay may indirectly detect analytes by measuring various molecular interactions. Some bioassays detect analytes by activating a label that is covalently attached to a binding partner upon analyte binding to a bait molecule. Other bioassays measure analyte binding of an immobilized bait molecule to a solid substrate and changes in charge, refractive index, or mass change at an interface between the solid substrate and liquid sample. In various forms, electronic systems may rely upon alterations in current, voltage, or charge to indirectly detect, qualify, and quantify chemical analytes. It should be appreciated, however, that the demand for a low-cost and field-use friendly means or method to identify and detect low concentration analytes has resulted in ongoing efforts to improve the functionality and practicality of chemical and molecular detecting devices.
A good platform for detecting biological threats should be able to identify a large range of agents and toxins. As many of these agents and toxins are highly infective, the platform should demonstrate sensitivity and specificity to allow early exposure detection, reduce false positives, enable targeted countermeasures, and minimize the spread of infection. The platform should also allow for rapid detection to enable timely intervention. In this context, the challenges of developing a sensitive, yet specific, high-throughput detector having a wide working range may be appreciated. The challenges are further complicated considering the need for portability, minimal operational complexity, low power consumption, low manufacturing cost, and operability in harsh environments, for example.
Platforms for detecting molecules have evolved from impractical and laboratory-based systems to portable miniaturized “Lab-on-a-Chip” platforms. For example, the detection of biological threats has evolved from conducting threat detection and diagnosis though the Laboratory Response Network to detection using a mobile lab based system, such as the Biological Integrated Detection System (BIDS), to mesoscale peptide bioassays. This evolution is representative of the need for small molecule detectors that are capable of rapid and point-of-use detection.
Traditional bioassays fall into two categories: label-based or label-free. In label-based bioassays, the target molecule, such as a toxin or other molecule, binds with a bait molecule, often a complementary peptide, DNA, or RNA molecule which has a covalently attached label. Fluorescent dyes and radioactive isotopes are commonly used labels where binding of the target molecule to the bait molecule causes the release of fluorescence or radiation. In this context, the measurement of fluorescence or radioactivity provides an indirect detection and quantification of the target molecule.
However, these array label-based assays suffer from significant limitations despite some improved sensitivity and specificity. First, these array label-based systems require identification, design, synthesis, and immobilization of the bait molecules, which are significantly rate-limiting in the assay manufacturing process. Second, immobilization of a bait molecule with a three-dimensional structure results in a loss of activity of the bait molecule which may generate a false negative outcome. Third, the addition of a covalently bound fluorophore or other radioactive tag significantly modifies an interaction between the target molecule and the bait molecule, resulting in false positives and negatives. Fourth, tagging a bait molecule with a fluorescing or radioactive tag adds a layer of complexity to the manufacturing process. Fifth, the assay requires that readers detect the optical/radiation signal from the tags be incorporated with the platform, thus dramatically increasing platform cost while reducing portability. Finally, the extinction of a signal generated from a binding event due to scattering from the background matrix is a persistent problem.
In the context outlined above, the limitations imposed by traditional label-based bioassays prompted the development of label-free methods. Like the label-based bioassays, a label-free bioassay includes bait molecules immobilized on a solid substrate. The detection of the binding between the target molecule and bait molecule is based on (a) the change in charge at the solid-liquid interface that results from the binding event, (b) evanescent wave attenuation due to a change in refractive index at the solid-liquid interface, and/or (c) mass change at the solid-liquid interface. Charge based detection methods eliminate the need for expensive signal readers, thereby reducing the cost of detection, enhancing system portability, reducing overall power consumption, and increasing ease of operation. The charge based method is also scalable, which is an essential strategy in developing a high throughput detection platform. Though the label-free platforms do not suffer from problems like tag-altered target molecule binding and reduced signal yield, they are still afflicted by the issue of bait molecule misfolding on immobilization to a solid surface.
Generally, the bait molecule is utilized to infer whether the target molecule is present or absent in both label-based and label-free platforms. The actual identity of the target molecule is inferred from the nature of the bait molecule with which binding occurs. Mass spectrometry, on the other hand, is a time-critical, broadband analysis technique that directly measures molecular composition from estimates of charge-to-mass ratios of vaporized fragments of the analyte. Commercial mass spectrometers are reportedly capable of detection in the nanomolar concentration range. Arrayed, multi-channel, modular architectures for time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometers have been detailed for rapid, in-parallel acquisition of information.
However, mass spectrometry analysis is better suited to larger molecular weight target molecules that can be fragmented into several constituent moieties for analysis. Small molecular weight (<5 kDa) target molecules are not easily identified by this technique. Mass spectrometer and associated ancillary equipment (e.g., vacuum pumps) are energy intensive in operation and are not easily miniaturized, thus making portability an issue. Additionally, mass spectrometer operation and data analysis require intervention of skilled technicians, making the detection platform ill-suited for point-of-use applications. Thus, in view of traditional detection systems, the need for a robust, rapid, low-cost, point-of-use detection platform for small amounts of molecules in fluid samples can be appreciated.
Molecular vibration-assisted-charge transfer between an electron source and donor has been documented in nature. Fruit flies detect odorants by transferring an electron from an intracellular electron source upon entrance of an odorant into a transmembrane pocket. The electron charge transfer stimulates G-protein mediated signal transduction pathways and thus allows the fruit fly to identify an odorant utilizing vibrational signatures of odorant molecules. Similarly, according to aspects of the embodiments described herein, the detection of molecular analytes by the detection of electron transfer is achieved. In the biosensor, according to the embodiments described herein, current measured due to electron transfer that contains information about vibrational frequencies of molecular bond vibrations within a molecular analyte, as well as information about participating electronic energies, is acquired directly from the engineered inorganic transducing interface and analyzed.
Generally, the biosensor system according to the embodiments described herein includes an electrochemical charge transfer platform where the application of an electromagnetic field at an interface between an electrode and an electrolyte results in the transfer of charge across the interface. The transfer of charge may occur from the electrode to a chemical species in the electrolyte that can accept the charge (i.e., a redox-active species) or vice-versa. The transfer of charge is, in turn, characterized by electromagnetic field-mediated tunneling of electrons that may be assisted by exchange of energy with thermal vibrations of other non-redox-active species (i.e., analytes) at the interface. The interface is engineered such that a number of collisions experienced by transferring electronic charge with other analyte molecules is minimal but not zero. The collisions of the tunneling electrons with thermal vibrations are responsible for the energy exchange between the transferring charge and the analyte molecules.
The electrochemical charge transfer platform according to the embodiments described herein includes a metal/semiconductor electrode and an organic or aqueous electrolyte separated by a thin dielectric layer. The organic or aqueous electrolyte, which is coupled or in immediate contact with the thin dielectric layer, is characterized by a distribution of uni-polar charge that decays to zero as distance from the dielectric-electrolyte interface increases. The dielectric layer acts as a molecular insulator that slows down the rate of electron transfer sufficiently such that a tunneling electron minimally collides with surrounding thermal vibrations. Measured current that would characterize the tunneling of electrons across a suitably engineered interface would contain signatures of the resonant energy exchange between the tunneling electrons and the molecular vibration modes of the analytes, as well as signatures of the electronic energies in the electrode and redox active species that participate in the tunneling process.
The biosensor system according to the embodiments described herein further includes a high gain noise suppression feedback loop to electronically “cool” the system and minimize thermal noise that otherwise dissipates the resonant signal of interest. At low electronic temperatures, transfer of electronic charge occurs in a resonant manner by inelastic interactions with quantized vibrations of a target analyte as well as by direct elastic interactions between the participating electronic energy levels.
In various aspects and embodiments, the biosensor system measures at least one of resonant interactions by measuring a) the tunneling current (I) as a function of applied voltage (V), b) small signal conductance (dI/dV) as a function of applied voltage, or c) conductance derivative (d2I/dV2) as a function of applied voltage. Each resonance feature manifests as a discontinuity in the measured profiles and may be correlated to a vibrational frequency of a molecular bond in the analyte or to a participating electronic energy level. Since vibrational frequencies may be relied upon as characteristic signatures of molecular bonds, akin to human fingerprints, for example, the number and types of bonds in the analyte can be determined from these discontinuities. Discontinuities corresponding to electronic energy levels yield information specific to the electronic structures of the electrode and electrolyte phases that may themselves be perturbed by the analyte chemistries. Each analyte possesses a unique molecular bond signature, thus allowing direct, highly specific analyte detection.
With further regard to resonant electron transfer at an electrochemical interface, the biosensor system described herein relies in part upon measuring electron flux produced in charge-transfer-related quantum-mechanical transitions at an electrochemical interface. In this context, the measured electron flux or currents are representative of molecular structural and chemical information where quantum mechanical transitions manifest as discontinuous features in the currents. The molecular structural and chemical information, once determined, is unique to each analyte, thus allowing for highly specific molecular species determination.
Turning now to the drawings, the features and aspects of the embodiments are described in further detail.
The strength of the coupling factors can be well represented by equivalent length scales. For differing values of length scale parameters, the nature of the transition process is qualitatively depicted in
The electronic and electronic-nuclear coupling strengths can be tuned in many different ways, for example, by changing the applied electrostatic field, by tuning the local interface chemistry, conditioning the physical system to reduce its intrinsic noise, scaling down the physical sensor interface, and combinations thereof. In addition, assisting electromagnetic fields (e.g., optical and magnetic fields) may also be relied upon to induce electronic transitions between energy levels in the electrode-electrolyte system that are resonant with the dissipated energy of the field. Control of the above mentioned parameters reduces thermal de-phasing of the resonance phenomena in the charge transfer process.
The coupling between electronic energy states participating in the transition process and the surrounding bath of thermal vibrational modes can be weak, as illustrated by the example in
The coupling between the discrete electronic energy states of the electrode and the redox-active species in the electrolyte also affects the ability of the interface to transduce the molecular vibrational mode information. A strong coupling between the electrode-electrolyte energies results in a “fast” charge transfer event that is limited only by the rate of dielectric thermal repolarization around the electrode and redox-active species, as illustrated by the example in
An optimum level of electronic-electronic and electronic-nuclear coupling is required to transduce the discrete vibrational mode information as indicated previously. Thus, in the optimal case, the electron transfer is limited by the rate of the electronic tunneling transition from reactant to product state, where the electron participates in an inelastic exchange of energy with the molecules in the intervening layer between the electrode and redox active species in the electrolyte. This optimally-coupled transition allows the transferring electron to be de-excited from a higher energy level to a lower energy level, thereby losing energy to the intervening molecular species, which shows as a signature in the current, conductance, or conductance derivative signal.
With regard to the design of a vibrational mode information transduction interface, according to aspects of the embodiments described herein, the measurement of the flux of electrons crossing an electrified dielectric monolayer modified electrochemical interface allows for analyte detection. In this context,
In one embodiment described herein, a sensor consists of an electrode (e.g., metal/semiconductor), a molecularly thin spacer layer, and a redox-active species in the electrolyte. An electrode that acts as a source or sink of transitioning electrons may be defined by discrete electronic energy states that can interact with discrete energy levels of the molecular redox species in the electrolyte, as opposed to a continuous collection of energy levels that are characteristic of a macroscopic wire. The need for a discretized energy structure of the electrode at room temperature tends to the need for an electrode of nanoscale dimensions. The nanoscale electrode would, in turn, be electrically addressed by a lead (e.g., electrical lead) that applies or supplies a suitable voltage and, as a result, charge flows in an external instrumentation circuit as a tunneling current.
The sensor size, lead area, dielectric spacer thickness, choice of electrolyte (e.g., aqueous, organic, ionic salt), and choice of redox-active species in the electrolyte may be determined, for example, so as to optimize the electronic and electronic-nuclear coupling at the electrochemical interface. Quantitatively, “optimal” is defined in this context by a specific value of interface charge density. This value of interface charge density may be determined by kinetics of the accompanying electron transfer reaction (which determines the nature of electrode material, the nature of electrolyte, and type of redox active ion in the electrolyte) and dielectric spacer thickness. The determination of equivalent or suitable lead area is a trade-off between minimizing parasitic capacitance from insulated leads and electrical double layer at the solid-liquid interface and minimizing the thermal broadening of the discrete electronic energies of the nano-electrode with increasing size.
With the application of a voltage between a macroscopic lead and a reference electrode that sits in bulk electrolyte solution, electrons tunnel from the nanoscale electrode to the redox-active species in the electrolyte. If the interface is engineered appropriately, for “optimal” coupling conditions, such that the tunneling of the electron from electrode to electrolyte is rate limiting and no other process (e.g., mass transfer of redox-active species to interface from bulk electrolyte, capacitive charging/discharging of interface charge, or tunneling of electrons from lead to nanoscale electrode) is slow enough to compete, then a current measured by a low noise transimpedance amplifier and acquired by a data acquisition system corresponds to a direct measurement of this tunneling event.
In other words, as an electron tunnels across the appropriately engineered interface, it loses energy equivalent to the applied bias value, and this energy is lost to molecular vibrations of analyte species with suitable vibrational energies that exist at the interface between the electrode and redox-active species. Thus, the biosensor according to the embodiments described herein measures a spectrum of molecular vibrational oscillation modes of an analyte at an electrochemical interface within a liquid electrolyte in resonance with an energy gap between initial and final electronic energy states of the electrochemical interface. In addition to vibrational signatures, the tunneling electron also transduces information about electronic resonances arising from elastic (i.e., collision-less) transitions between the electrode and redox species energy levels. However, it is expected that elastic transitions would be probabilistically less likely for a suitably designed interface.
In one sense, this approach is analogous to that of electromagnetic probes, such as near-infrared (NIR) vibrational spectroscopy probes, than with conventional electrostatic measurements. However, as the molecular structure information is transduced directly to an electronic signal before acquisition, the proposed biosensor is highly scalable. The direct acquisition of chemistry specific information about an analyte in the form of molecular vibrational modes also eliminates the need for time and labor-intensive combinatorial screening against bait-molecule probes required by traditional bioassays.
The quantum information transduction mechanism achieved according to the embodiments described herein enables highly specific interrogation of THz frequency molecular vibrations at experimentally accessible (˜mV) electronic energies/potentials by scanning the electronic energy with an applied voltage at a metallic, electrically conductive lead. Experimental results, such as those illustrated in
According to aspects of the embodiments, various types of biosensor structures and interfaces may be relied upon to specifically optimize electronic and/or electronic-nuclear coupling. For example, various thin (e.g., sub ˜1 nm) dielectric-film-modified nanoscale electrode-electrolyte interfaces may be relied upon. The interfaces may be patterned in planar fashion on a silicon die using standard planar microfabrication techniques, for example.
Depending upon the type of the biosensor interface, one or more electrodes may be planar with metallic rectangular pads being used for contacts and thin leads being used for the sensing architecture. To control the volume of fluid, a liquid fluidic channel/chamber may be used to contain the volume of liquid sitting atop thin leads of the biosensor interface. In some embodiments, the entire biosensor interface electrode structure may be fabricated on a silicon substrate using standard microfabrication techniques, and the fluidic channel can be made out of a plastic or ceramic and sealed hermetically with the silicon surface to create a leakproof system.
Turning to
According to other aspects of the embodiments described below, using one of the interfaces illustrated in
In the biosensor platform 700, the sensor 714 may include an electrochemical or patterned electrochemical interface and an interface chip integrated into a low-cost, disposable, lateral flow-based microfluidic architecture. In one example operation, capillary transport may be relied upon in the biosensor platform 700 to separate serum from whole blood and deliver it to an electrode surface of the sensor 714. However, the mechanism to induce fluid flow in the device is not limited to capillary transport or flow. Dielectrophoresis may also be employed to actuate the liquid medium in the portable biochip configuration.
Among other elements, the sensor 714 may include a plurality of thin films 740 (e.g., the electrochemical or patterned electrochemical interface), a semiconductor die 750, and an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) 760. The thin films 740 may be deposited by atomic layer deposition, for example, and include working 742, counter 744, and reference 746 films or areas. The semiconductor die 750 may include an electrode array and through-die vias for electrical coupling with the ASIC 760. The ASIC 760 may include bonding pads 762 and 764. The bonding pads 762 may be relied upon for electrical connection with the through die vias from the semiconductor die 750, and the bonding pads 764 may be relied upon for electrical connection to other processing and/or data collection processors or circuitry 770. It should be appreciated, however, that the structure of the sensor 714 illustrated in
In one embodiment, the biosensor platform 700 includes elements at the macro-, micro-, and nano-scales, where the microfluidic elements bridge the nano-scale transducer to blood sampling and dispensing at the macro-scale. Since the patterned sensor interface with the integrated electronic is relatively costly, the microfluidics may be designed such that fabrication costs are relatively low, power consumption is negligible, and the microfluidic component can be easily disposed of if excessive blockage obstructs the flow path.
Referring back to
It is noted that, although not required for all sample types, the fluidic system is preferred when analyzing complex mediums, such as blood, where components may interfere with the detection of low abundance analytes. Pumping of the sample 704 may be active or passive into the fluidic system. It should be appreciated that the filtration media, chosen filter membranes, other membranes, and characteristics of the micro-chromatograph column 710 may be dependent upon factors such as sample type, sample amount, or abundance of target analyte, for example.
Continuing with the operation of the biosensor platform 700 in
Referring again to
Resolved spectral information, once acquired, is then correlated with vibrational energy data to identify specific molecular species associated with the macro-molecule analyte. This may be accomplished by employing an information-driven strategy for targeted, non-redundant analysis of a bio-analyte in an electrolyte solution. Signatures of information-rich subsets of the bio-analyte, such as cysteine-containing peptides, phosphorylated peptides, or glycosylated peptides, may be tracked in the resolved spectrum of the bio-analyte. These subsets will serve as molecular markers for identifying and quantifying the presence of molecular species of interest. A reference database containing these molecular markers may be constructed for each target analyte as further described below. In other words, each analyte may be expected to produce its own signature spectrum of information. By comparing the resolved spectrum from a sample to the reference database, the target analyte may be identified.
Turning to
Briefly, among other steps, the process of spectral data collection 910 includes pumping a sample through a fluidic system at reference numeral 912, filtering the sample at reference numeral 914, separating and removing at least one composition from the sample at reference numeral 916, fractionating the sample at reference numeral 918, and transducing information from the sample at reference numeral 920. The pumping, filtering, separating/removing, and fractionating, at reference numerals 912, 914, 916, 918, respectively, may be performed in connection with one or more of the disposable modules of the fluidic system described above with reference to
As for the more particular example of conducting the process of spectral data collection 910 using a sample of raw blood, after pumping at reference numeral 912, the sample of raw blood may be subject to filtering at reference numeral 914, where serum is separated from whole blood. Next, the serum is cleaned of high abundance proteins at reference numeral 916 by passing through an immunoseparation membrane, such as a nitrocellulose membrane that comprises surface antibodies specific to the high-abundance proteins, for example. The liquid sample is then fractionated reference numeral 918, such that different proteins fractions are eluted sequentially onto the active sensor area. The separation of proteins may occur by utilizing a general protein specific property, such as charge-to-mass ratio, to sequentially elute low-abundance proteins. Finally, information is transduced from the eluted proteins at reference numeral 920.
In other aspects of the process 930, stable isotopes of reference peptides, for example, may also be prepared at reference numeral 938. In some embodiments, the same fractions as well as isotope-labeled reference peptides prepared at reference numeral 938 may also be examined in parallel by traditional liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS-MS) techniques at reference numeral 940.
The analysis process 950 may include, at reference numeral 952, one or more of acquiring, post processing, and/or displaying data collected by the spectral data collection process 910. At reference numeral 954, the analysis process 950 may also include comparing signatures from the data collected by the spectral data collection process 910 with a database of reference signatures (i.e., 956) collected by the reference database collection process 930. At reference numeral 954, the database of reference signatures 956 may be compared with raw data from the biosensor platform 700 to identify molecular analytes of interest. It should be appreciated that the processes 910, 930, and 950 are provided by way of example only.
Turning to
The desired minimization may be achieved by increasing the electron-tunneling barrier ϕ2 at the dielectric-electrolyte interface. In one embodiment, the electron tunneling barrier ϕ2 increases as the electrolyte pH increases. Other exemplary embodiments achieve an increased tunneling barrier by increasing electrolyte anion electronegativity, increasing dielectric monolayer functional group electronegativity, and/or increasing dielectric monolayer thickness, for example.
The desired minimization in electronic coupling may also be attained by increasing the limiting barrier ϕ2 at the dielectric-electrolyte interface 1004. In one embodiment, this is achieved by coating the dielectric monolayer 1003 with an organic coating, such as short chain silanes, with different electronegative, electrolyte-facing functional groups, such as —OH, —OR, —COOH, —SH, —SR, —COR, —NO2, —Br, or the like. These aforementioned coatings are suitable for forming with MVD at the dielectric surface 1003.
The metal electrode-dielectric barrier 1002, unlike the dielectric-electrolyte barrier 1004, is a function of the metal work-function, dielectric band gap, and nature of molecular orbital distortion induced by a bond between the metal 1001 and dielectric materials 1003. A reduction in the coupling between electrode 1001 and electrolyte 1005 may also be achieved by altering the tunneling barrier located at the dielectric-electrode interface. For example, increasing the tunneling barrier ϕ1 at the dielectric-electrode surface reduces coupling between electrode and electrolyte phases, thus leading to increased resolution of vibrational frequency information in the measured current.
For some embodiments, the mechanism of tunneling based charge injection in the dielectric 1003 would be electron tunneling. In other words, the dielectric 1003 would be comprised of an inorganic-oxide. For these embodiments, metals such as Pt, Ir, Se, or Au, or their alloys in different compositions are preferred. For other embodiments, hole-tunneling is the mechanism of charge injection in the dielectric 1003. It should be appreciated that the dielectric or dielectric film 1003 in these embodiments may be comprised of an organic alkane. For these embodiments, metals like Ta, Ti, Zr, Hf, or their alloys in various compositions may be preferred. The final metal choice is dependent on many factors including mechanical, diffusional, and electrochemical stability of the electrode, ease of deposition, electrical resistivity, and ability to seed a dielectric layer, for example.
Among embodiments, nanoscale structures of metal electrodes for sensors described herein are fabricated either in top-down methods using nanoscale patterning techniques like Electron Beam Lithography (EIB) or Focused Ion Beam (FIB), or bottom-up methods like nanoparticle self-assembly on patterned structures or using a combination of methods thereof.
In various embodiments, the dielectric film 1003 that spatially separates the electrode 1001 and electrolyte 1005 layers is comprised of a medium-k nanolaminate. The high-k material in this nanolaminate may be Ta2O2, ZrO2, TiO2 or other suitable material. It is noted that large dielectric constants for the insulating film facilitate greater charge accumulation at the dielectric-electrolyte interface, thus effectively increasing the tunneling barrier and reducing the electronic coupling. However, the increased charge density increases the nuclear-electronic coupling. Also, since a larger dielectric constant is typically associated with small band-gap and, consequently, higher non-tunneling leakage current, the high-k material may be intercalated between alternating layers of lower-dielectric constant oxides.
In the context outlined above,
On the other hand, the dielectric film utilized to insulate the addressing lead from the electrolyte solution would typically be of low-k material like SiO2. The low-k nature of the insulating dielectric would minimize losses induced by the parasitic capacitance that contributes to the dephasing of the resonance signal. The sensor interface configuration may thus be comprised of low-k and high-k insulating material co-patterned on the same interface depending on the functional utility of the insulator.
Reduction in nuclear-electronic coupling may, additionally or alternatively, be achieved by applying a directional magnetic field to the nanoscale electrochemical interface, where a) the dielectric film that serves as the function insulating element includes a nanolaminate structure that uses differentially oriented film magnetic moments to constrain the spin of the tunneling electron, and b) the nanoscale electrode participating in the redox reaction would comprise a nanostructured ferromagnetic/paramagnetic element with strongly oriented electronic moments. Preferably, the magnetic tunneling nanolaminate will comprise dielectric-based thin-film architectures with room temperature ferromagnetic properties that allow for the generation of local, inhomogeneous magnetic fields that can interact with the magnetic dipole of the transitioning electron to “gate” the quantum-mechanical transition.
In the context outlined above,
Further reduction in nuclear-electronic coupling may be made possible by the application of a “reaction” gate to control the interface charge density at the electrochemical interface. The electrochemical reaction gate proposed in this embodiment would utilize a fast/adiabatic electrochemical electron transfer reaction to set the charge density across the entire solid-liquid interface, which would also include a small sensing interface area, as illustrated in the example of
In yet another example embodiment of the gate-electrode system, as illustrated in
A third embodiment of the gate-controlled sensing interface would consist of the sensing interface being localized on the tip of a sharpened probe, with the gate electrode being co-located on the body of the probe. As illustrated in the example of
Another key component to the biosensor platform 700 (
Besides physical sources of noise, electronic sources of noise from the measurement instrumentation (e.g., wide band thermal noise, wideband shot noise, 1/fα noise, etc.) also manifest across the electrochemical interface and may manifest as enhanced coupling. Therefore, electronic instrumentation should be designed to minimize electronic noise and to set the physical noise to pre-determined, desired levels.
The measured non-adiabatic current is a function of two non-interacting frequency domains: (a) a “macro-frequency” (approximately 1 Hz) that determines the rate-limiting step in the macroscopic electrochemical system and (b) a “micro frequency” (>1012 Hz) that measures the dynamics of molecular vibrations and the tunneling process, where the dynamics are manifest in the electronic energy (or equivalently, the applied bias) space. Multiple measurement schemes involving different voltage signal types and differing forms of data acquisition are proposed for the identification of signatures in the measured current.
In one case, a small amplitude low-frequency Alternating Current (AC) voltage excitation is combined with a Direct Current (DC) voltage bias and applied to the electrochemical interface. Then, the lock-in acquired AC current is recorded as a function of Direct Current (DC) bias at the nano-engineered electrode-electrolyte interface. In another case, a DC voltage is applied directly to interface and a DC current is acquired. In still another case, a small amplitude low frequency AC voltage is combined with a DC bias and applied at the interface and higher harmonics of the measured current are acquired with lock-in techniques. The application of the DC and AC voltages and simultaneous acquisition of the current may be accompanied by the automated modulation of applied magnetic fields or noise power set-points. Effective signal extraction requires suppression of extrinsic noise contributions and control of intrinsic noise contributions. The acquisition of the tunneling current signal (AC and DC components) requires implementation of suitable hardware and software-based data filtration techniques to minimize electronic noise picked up in the measurement process.
Turning to
Thus, with reference to
The circuit 1400 further includes a current measurement circuit 1418 coupled to the working electrode 1410 and a lock-in detection circuit 1420 coupled to an output of the current measurement circuit 1418. As illustrated in
Although embodiments have been described herein in detail, the descriptions are by way of example. The features of the embodiments described herein are representative and, in alternative embodiments, certain features and elements may be added or omitted. Additionally, modifications to aspects of the embodiments described herein may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention defined in the following claims, the scope of which are to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass modifications and equivalent structures.
Further, it should be noted that ratios, concentrations, amounts, and other numerical data may be expressed herein in a range format. It is to be understood that such a range format is used for convenience and brevity, and thus, should be interpreted in a flexible manner to include not only the numerical values explicitly recited as the limits of the range, but also to include all the individual numerical values or sub-ranges encompassed within that range as if each numerical value and sub-range is explicitly recited. To illustrate, a concentration range of “about 0.1% to about 5%” should be interpreted to include not only the explicitly recited concentration of about 0.1% to about 5%, but also individual concentrations (e.g., 1%, 2%, 3%, and 4%) and the sub-ranges (e.g., 0.5%, 1.1%, 2.2%, 3.3%, and 4.4%) within the indicated range. The term “about” can include traditional rounding according to significant figures of numerical values. In addition, the phrase “about ‘x’ to ‘y’” includes “about ‘x’ to about ‘y’”.
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